James Altucher

James Altucher has run a nine figure Venture Capital fund, a hedge fund, a fund of hedge funds, and is currently invested in over 30 private angel investments.

Some of his bestselling books related to finance include "Trade Like a Hedge Fund" (voted book of the year by "The Stock Trader's Almanac"), "Trade Like Warren Buffett", and the "Choose Yourself Guide to Wealth".

He's written over 18 books on finance and personal development. He's written columns for The Financial Times, The Wall Street Journal, Yahoo Finance, Forbes, and many other publications as well as appeared 100s of times on CNBC and Fox Business. A financial news site he developed, Stockpickr.com attracted millions of unique visitors and was acquired by TheStreet.com for $10 million.

His podcast, The James Altucher Show, gets millions of downloads per month and he's had guests on ranging from Mark Cuban, Peter Thiel, Arianna Huffington, Sara Blakely, Steve Case, and hundreds of other successful entrepreneurs and peak performers.

He has personally traded or invested in many styles of investing ranging from venture investing, statistical arbitrage, convertible arbitrage, value investing, activist investing, PIPEs, merger arbitrage, and many other styles of trading.

Last week, while several of your portfolio holdings were rocketing to new swing highs, an underpublicized Congressional subcommittee held a hearing on providing safe harbor — via the Secure and Fair Enforcement Banking Act of 2019 — for banks wanting to work with legal cannabis businesses in the U.S.

In recent years, the esports industry has been booming… professional gamers are getting paid to play their favorite games… and big names are taking notice. In fact, the esports industry has the potential to rival pro sports leagues…

When I heard about another incredible community from master developer Alfredo Aleman — this one literally sitting on a white sand beach an hour outside of Panama City — I was like get me there. Put me on a plane and take me to Playa Caracol.

Wall Street has always had a terrible habit of focusing only on the short term. I saw it in the 1980s, and I experienced it firsthand in the 1990s, the early-2000s, and even today. You see, many of the big name Wall Street institutions aren’t interested in helping you position your portfolio to capitalize on...